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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jean_GersonJean Gerson - Wikipedia

    Jean Charlier de Gerson (13 December 1363 – 12 July 1429) was a French scholar, educator, reformer, and poet, Chancellor of the University of Paris, a guiding light of the conciliar movement and one of the most prominent theologians at the Council of Constance.

  2. Feb 24, 2016 · Luther’s use of the image in his Commentary on the Magnificat has usually been traced back to Jean Gerson’s seventh treatise on the Magnificat, but this seems mistaken. Footnote 16 This is because Gerson uses a division (mens – ratio – anima) different from Luther’s, and refers to the Tabernacle only briefly and in passing.

    • Ilmari Karimies
    • ilmari.karimies@helsinki.fi
    • 2016
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  4. Project Title: Magnificat anima mea te Dominum... Language: Latin Author: Jean Gerson Date of Composition: c. 1428? Project Number: 153

  5. Foliation: 74r-82r. Project Number: 418 Glorieux Number: 418. Date of Copy: c. 1470. Manuscript Title: Tractatus super Magnificat. Titulus: "Ex tractatu magistri Johannis Gerson super Magnificat particio tercia tractatus noni super illum versum: Esurientes implevit bonis etc. per soliloquium conversum ad Mariam per notulas quinquaginta de eukaristia.

  6. Feb 6, 2012 · Jean Gerson (b. 1363–d. 1429; also Jean de Gerson, or, originally, Jean Charlier) was the most popular and influential theologian of his generation, the most important architect of the conciliar solution to the Great Schism (1378–1415), and the leading figure at the Council of Constance (1414–1418). He came from a family of modest means ...

  7. www.ewtn.com › catholicism › libraryMagnificat | EWTN

    MAGNIFICAT. Summary. I. The Magnificat in Montfort’s Life and Thought: 1. Hymn of Mary; 2. Expression of praise and blessing; 3. Divine canticle; 4. Prayer with the power of God; 5. Prayer filled with mystery. II. The Magnificat in Contemporary Thought: 1. Theological hymn; 2. Salvific hymn; 3. Song of liberation; 4. Ecumenical song. III.

  8. Gerson, Jean, 1363–1429: Collectorium super magnificat [Latin] - Medieval Manuscripts.

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